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USS Ocelot (IX-110)

USS Ocelot
USS Ocelot (IX-110) at Ulithi while serving as Service Squadron Ten flagship, 6 May 1945.
History
Name: USS Ocelot
Namesake: Ocelot
Builder: Oscar Daniels Shipbuilding Co., Tampa, Florida
Laid down: 5 April 1918
Launched: 22 February 1919, as Yomachichi
Acquired: 2 October 1943
Commissioned: 15 January 1944, as Ocelot
Decommissioned: 6 December 1945
Struck: 3 January 1946
Nickname(s): Spotted Cat
Fate: Sold for scrapping, 19 February 1948
General characteristics (in USN service)
Type: Design 1027 ship
Displacement:
  • 5,868 long tons (5,962 t) (light)
  • 8,747 long tons (8,887 t) (full)
Length: 416 ft (127 m)
Beam: 54 ft (16 m)
Draft: 18 ft 9 in (5.72 m)
Propulsion:
Speed: 13 knots (24 km/h; 15 mph)
Capacity: Accommodation for 819 men (81 officers, 738 enlisted)
Complement: 82
Armament:

USS Ocelot (IX–110) was an unclassified miscellaneous vessel of the United States Navy, which served as the flagship of Service Squadron 10 in the Pacific War from late 1944, until she was wrecked in a typhoon in late 1945.

The wooden-hulled vessel was built in 1918–19 as the Yomachichi by the Oscar Daniels Shipbuilding Company of Tampa, Florida for the United States Shipping Board. Originally fitted with vertical triple expansion steam engines, she was re-equipped with diesel engines in 1926–27. On 11 March 1940 the ship was chartered to the United States Lines by the War Shipping Administration (WSA) at Baltimore, Maryland.

On 16 September 1943 CinCPac requested a barracks ship to accommodate 50 officers and 800 men for use at an advanced base, and the WSA nominated the motor ship Yomachichi, then under repair at Baltimore, as suitable for the purpose. The ship was accepted by the Navy under a bareboat charter from the WSA on 2 October 1943. Commissioned as Ocelot on 15 January 1944, with Lt. Milton S. Samuels in command, the conversion work was completed on 22 January 1944, but problems with the main engine meant that she did not report for shakedown until early May.

Ocelot transited the Panama Canal and, following a brief stop in San Diego, arrived at Pearl Harbor to undergo conversion to flagship for Service Squadron 10. The ship was fitted with extensive radio and visual signaling equipment, with radio and coding rooms in the superstructure, and berths for the squadron commander, staff officers, and enlisted men below. The conversion was completed in October, and Ocelot sailed via Eniwetok for Ulithi where she spent the next six months providing an administrative post at the advanced base. The movement of American forces closer to Japan necessitated advancing support elements as well, and on 24 May 1945 Ocelot shifted to San Pedro Bay, Leyte On 13 September Ocelot again moved, to Buckner Bay, Okinawa. Shortly after her arrival there, on 19 September 1945 Typhoon Ida struck.


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